>>14807OS 9 uses co-operative multitasking, whereby the OS waits for each individual process to `give up control' of the CPU so it can allow another to run. If the program doesn't give up control, then you're up shit creek.

Windows 95 onwards used pre-emptive multitasking (at least in 32-bit mode), where the OS can forcibly wrest control of the CPU from a program.

It looks like you're using EE which has always seemed to confuse sentry (or rather the whois that sentry pulls from). It doesn't look like it's giving you a location at all to me, which it usually does if it doesn't have any regional data.

For the first time in a long while, it's accurate for me. Usually it thinks I'm in Glasgow.

Every couple of days or so, my router decides to stop resolving britfa.gs. It's definitely the router as no device will work and a reset fixes it instantly. I can't identify any pattern to the outages and there's nothing in the logs about it. The only thing I can think of is the DNS I'm using (1.1.1.1) being anti-british.

It's hardly a big issue, and /shed/ is probably a shite place for this as it's obviously on my end, but, you know, it's a bit annoying.

If you're not a raging torrent-hound, EE's 200 Gig a month for £60, 1 month's rolling contract, might have some charm if you have coverage?
Works for me, where the choice is that, metered satellite, or 150Kbps ADSL from BT through whoever.

>>14693 adding: other suppliers and data caps exist. EE allow sanely priced topups if you blow through your quota. The EE routers are tolerable Huawei boxes with wired ethernet that you can feed into a real router.

>>14694I pay £54 to Plusnet for a ~70mb connection and it's unlimited, gives me Anytime calls and I live in a field. Fibre to Exchange is being rolled out all across the country, I can't imagine the far more densely populated English countryside being left behind with bundled exchanges controlled by BT if my feild in Scotland is unbundled and has upgraded equipmemt, nevermind an actual town or province with double the amount of residents as the glorified village with a Greggs I live in.

>>14695Give them a call to have your bill reduced. Mention that their new customer deals are far better. When they say "we like to attract customers with good prices but retain them by delivering good value" point out that Virgin do the same. I pay <£30/month (18 months) and that was through the sales department and not retentions. You have a higher call plan but that's worth £8/month tops. You can easily save £200 quid over the year for the price of a free phonecall.

I see where the OP is coming from, here. Going into the coding of Trello in that other thread wasn't really necessary. It sort of petered out with Cunt A admitting the complexity of a site's coding isn't an indicator of success or utility, and Cunt B conceding that it maybe wasn't a revolutionary bit of programming as much as it was a useful and widely relied-upon tool. Both are absolutely common sense observations, and neither were related to the topic of: how do you plan your life?